Conference of the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR)
Innsbruck, 26-28 August 2020
Panel Title: Social Movements and Digital Organizing
Chair: Anastasia Kavada (Reader in Media and Politics, School of Media and Communication, University of Westminster)
Discussant: Alice Mattoni (Associate Professor, Department of Political
and Social Sciences University of Bologna)
Internet use is thought to have changed the organizational dynamics of
social movements. This panel will take stock of changes and continuities in
social movement organizing through both a historical analysis, looking back at
20 years of digital organizing, and a focus on emerging platforms and trends.
The panel invites papers that critically examine the relationship
between digital media and different organizing models, posing important
questions around the politics and ideology that informs the use of such media
and their technical design. Research in this area has investigated whether and
how the use of digital media fosters more decentralized and horizontal forms of
organizing. It has also questioned the meaning of the term ‘organization’,
asking whether it needs to be expanded to encompass more informal and
unofficial practices of organizing that happen without social movement
organizations or other institutions of collective action. It has also explored
how digital communication practices can produce new organizations from below,
as well as hidden hierarchies and power asymmetries that belie the purported
drive towards horizontality. A key issue in this respect is how the values,
goals, knowledge and experience of different collective actors affect practices
of digital organizing.
The panel welcomes papers that focus on the role of digital media in
mobilizing audiences and in creating communities of hope and indignation. Apart
from Twitter and Facebook, that have received significant academic attention in
recent years, the panel warmly invites papers that also investigate more
private channels of communication, including internal email lists and instant
messaging platforms like Telegram and Whatsapp. It also encourages papers that
look at the communication ecology of social movements or that may focus on one
platform but locate its use within this ecology.
Yet beyond the functions and practices of digital media, this panel also
asks critical questions around the significance of these changes (and
continuities) in social movement organizing. Why do such changes matter?
Research has investigated whether digital media use is facilitating the
prefigurative politics of certain movements, helping activists to enact in the
present the more democratic forms of organizing that they would like to see in
the future. Other research has looked at the impact of such media practices on
the mobilizing potential of social movements, on the speed of action and its
impact on public opinion and policy makers, as well as on its potential to
escape the restrictions of more authoritarian regimes. The panel invites papers
that advance our understanding of why and how digital organizing matters for
collective action, aiming to make a critical contribution to this field of
research.
Please send your proposed paper title, keywords (max. 8) and a 500 word
abstract to A.Kavada@westminster.ac.uk by 10 February 2020.
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